A Darkness Absolute (Rockton 2)
"Does he have family here? Roger mentioned something about a mother, but he was in rough shape, so I don't know if she's still alive...."
"She is. She hasn't seen Benjamin either, but if it'll make you feel better, passing on Roger's message to someone, I'll take you to her."
*
We're in another cabin, and it's only once we're inside that I realize how nice Edwin's had been. His hadn't been much different from what I'd find in Rockton. Small, tidy, and decently furnished. This one is the kind of place that--before I arrived in the Yukon--my prejudices might have led me to expect from someone who chose to live out here. It smells of body odor and human waste, and I spot a bucket in the corner that obviously isn't emptied as often as it should be. The wood walls are thick with soot. The wooden floor is filthy enough that for a moment, I think it's dirt.
Edwin won't even come inside. He just opens the door and says, "Mary? You've got guests. Be nice to them." Then he totters off and a woman's voice says, "Close the goddamned door!"
We step into the darkness. The windows are shuttered, and the only light comes from the fire. A woman sits on the floor in front of it. She's stitching something, but it's too dark to tell what.
When she looks up, she peers at us and says, "Do I know you?"
"Jacob, ma'am. I don't know if we've met. My parents were Steve and Amy. They--"
"I remember them. Your mother was a whore."
Both men stiffen. We all do, but she just keeps going, saying, "She'd come here and parade around with her blond hair and her big blue eyes and then get all offended when the men leered at her. A whore, just like--" She mutters something and stabs her needle through. "Is that your brother? The one who ran off?"
"He--"
"Boys," she sniffs. "They all run off. Find some whore and leave. Boys and men alike. All the same." She squints at me. "You're a girl, though, aren't you?"
I lower the hood I'd raised for the walk through the settlement. She eyes me and says. "You're pretty. Boys prefer blondes, but blondes are whores. Course, having dark hair doesn't mean you're not a whore. Are you one?"
Poor Jacob is bug-eyed by this point. He keeps sneaking me looks, wondering why I'm not appalled, perhaps thinking he's missed a few nuances of female greeting rituals. Dalton's watching, too, but mostly to see if this woman's particular brand of crazy is going to result in physical violence. Yes, we're not dealing with a model of mental health, which is what I expect, if my suspicions are true.
I walk over to crouch beside the fire. "That depends on the definition of the person asking, doesn't it? I don't think I am. But everyone has their own way of identifying a whore. For some, it's skin color. For others, hair. I've even met people who say they can tell a woman's a whore if she has tattoos or piercings."
"Nothing wrong with pierced ears," Mary says. "Piercing in other places might be a problem, but I'd say it all depends on where. Tattoos, though? That's a sign. You got any of those?"
"No, ma'am."
"How about husbands? Leave one behind down south?"
"No, ma'am. I've never been married."
"Ever steal one?"
"Steal another woman's husband, you mean? No. What would I want with a guy who'd do something like that? It just means he'll do the same to me someday."
She cackles. "Smart girl." Another sizing-up look, this one a little kinder. "You're probably not a whore. Hard to say, but you don't seem the type. Now, what'd you come here to talk about?"
"I need to ask you a few questions about your son, Benjamin."
SIXTY-THREE
On the way back, we run into our old nemesis--the shortening days of winter. We've barely reached the snowmobiles before the sun's falling. We're prepared with sleeping bags and emergency shelter materials in the saddlebags, but I'm really hoping we don't need to use them. I have my answer, and every minute we delay is another minute we've left a killer in Rockton. And another minute Nicole is out there, trapped by the ever-increasing danger that this will all go to hell and we'll never find her again.
The snowmobiles have lights, though, and that's o
ur saving grace. We take it slower on the way back, our headlights illuminating the trail we'd cut coming in. It's not exactly a four-lane highway from Rockton to the First Settlement. There's not even a direct path--we need to cross a kilometer-wide thickly wooded gap between trails, which was difficult in the daylight and is absolutely treacherous now. Dalton leads, with Jacob on the back, me following. My brightly colored scarf from Anders, flutters from around Jacob's neck as a target to aid my headlight.
We drop Jacob off near his camp. He's going to stay there, in case he has to positively ID a man he's met before--a man he'll never forget. But I don't think we'll need that. Jacob has provided a description that makes me sure we have that positive ID already.
It starts to snow again after that, but it's not a storm, and we're close enough that we don't need to follow our own tracks. We're just coming up to Rockton when Dalton hits the brakes, and I see Anders approaching along the dark path, two militia guys behind him.
"Nice scarf!" he shouts to Dalton as we kill the engines. "It matches your eyes."